Bibliography

A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WRITINGS OF LEWIS CARROLL [CHARLES LUTWIDGE
DODGSON, M.A.], by S. H. Williams (1924) — the pioneer bibliography,
still of value.

A LIST OF THE WRITINGS OF LEWIS CARROLL . . . Collected by M. L.
Parrish. Privately printed, Philadelphia (1928) —catalogue of the
collection of M. L. Parrish of Philadelphia, now in the Princeton
University Library.

A HANDBOOK OF THE LITERATURE OF THE REV. C. L. DODGSON [LEWIS
CARROLL], by S. H. Williarns and F. Madan (1931) —for thirty years
the standard bibliography. A supplement was issued in 1935.

THE LEWIS CARROLL HANDBOOK. A new version of the preceding:
revised, augmented, and brought up to date by R. L. Green (1902).

Collected Editions

THE COMPLETE WORKS OF LEWIS CARROLL, with an Introduction by A
Woollcott and the illustrations by John Tenniel. New York (1937)
—incomplete but useful.

Selections

THE LEWIS CARROLL PICTURE BOOK, ed. S. D. Collingwood (1899) —an
entertaining miscellany. The sub-title reads: 'A Selection from the
Unpublished Writings and Drawings of Lewis Carroll, together with
Reprints from Scarce and Unacknowledged Work'. The selection
includes some of his photographs and letters, and reminiscences of
him. Re-issued as a paperback under the title Diversions and
Digressions of Lewis Carroll, 1961.

FURTHER NONSENSE VERSE AND PROSE, by Lewis Carroll, ed. L. Reed,
illustrated by H. M. Bateman (1926) —a sequel (hence the misleading
title) to Nonsense Verse: An Anthology, compiled by the same
editor.

ALICE IN WONDERLAND, THROUGH THE LOOKING-GLASS, ETC., with
introduction by E. Rhys (1929) —useful selection of the works,
including Phantasmagoria, A Tangled Tale, The Hunting of the Snark,
and Carroll's own illustrations to Alice.

FOR THE TRAIN Lewis Carrolls contributions to The Train, 1856-7.
Preface by H. J. Schonfield (1932) —contains excerpts from his
other writings on the subject of trains.

THE RUSSIAN JOURNAL AND OTHER SELECTIONS, ed. J. F. McDermott. New
York (1935).

THE HUMOROUS VERSES OF LEWIS CARROLL, with Illustrations by John
Tenniel, ed. J. E. Morpurgo (1950).

Separate Works — Juvenilia

THE RECTORY UMBRELLA AND MISCHMASCH (1932) —the last two of Lewis
Carroll's manuscript magazines, published in full with a foreword
by F. Milner.

USEFUL AND INSTRUCTIVE POETRY [1845](1954) —the earliest of the
manuscript magazines, with an introduction by D. Hudson.

Separate Works — Under the pseudonym 'Lewis Carroll'

ALICE'S ADVENTURES IN WONDERLAND, with forty-two illustrations by
John Tenniel (1865) —the author stopped the publication of the
first edition because he was dissatisfied with its production, and
in consequence barely more than a dozen copies have survived. There
was a second edition in 1860. Apart from the Bible, few books have
been more translated (in whole or in part) than Alice's Adventures
in Wonderland. Only French, Italian, German and Danish complete
translations appeared in the author's lifetime.

PHANTASMAGORIA AND OTHER POEMS (1869).

THROUGH THE LOOKING-GLASS AND WHAT ALICE FOUND THERE, with fifty
illustrations by John Tenniel (1872) —translated into German, 1923,
and French, 1949.

SOME POPULAR FALLACIES ABOUT VIVISECTION. Oxford (1875).

THE HUNTING OF THE SNARK, with nine illustrations by H. Holiday
(1876) —translated into French by Louis Aragon, 1929.

AN EASTER GREETING TO EVERY CHILD WHO LOVES ALICE . Oxford (1876).

DOUBLETS: A WORD-PUZZLE (1879).

RHYME? AND REASON? With sixty-five illustrations by A. B. Frost and
nine by H. Holiday (1883).

A TANGLED TALE, with six illustrations by A. B. Frost (1885).

ALICE'S ADVENTURES UNDER GROUND (1886) —a facsimile of the original
MS book (now in the British Museum) afterwards developed into
Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, with thirty-seven illustrations
by the author. Reissued, 1965.

Separate Works — By C. L. Dodgson

A GUIDE TO THE MATHEMATICAL STUDENT: PART 1, PURE MATHEMATICS.
Oxford (1864).

CONDENSATION OF DETERMINANTS (1866).

AN ELEMENTARY TREATISE ON DETERMINANTS (1867).

THE FIFTH BOOK OF EUCLID. Oxford and London (1868).

EUCLID, BOOK V. Oxford (1874).

EUCLID AND HIS MODERN RIVALS (1879).

EUCLID, BOOKS I AND 11, edited by Charles L. Dodgson, M.A. (1882).

LAWN TENNIS TOURNAMENTS (1883).

THE PRINCIPLES OF Parliamentary REPRESENTATION (1884).

SUPPLEMENT TO EUCLID AND HIS MODERN RIVALS (1885).

SUGGESTIONS AS TO THE ELECTION OF PROCTORS. Oxford (1886).

CURIOSA MATHEMATICA PART 1. A NEW THEORY OF PARALLELS (1888).

CURIOSA MATHEMATICA PART 11. PILLOW-PROBLEMS (1893).

Separate Works — Anonymous

RULES FOR COURT CIRCULAR: (A New Game of Cards for Two or More
Players.) Place of publication unknown (1860).

AN INDEX TO IN MEMORIAM (1862) —suggested and edited by Dodgson but
chiefly compiled by one or more of his sisters.

CROQUET CASTLES. Place of publication unknown. (1863) —an elaborate
variation of the game of croquet for five players.

THE NEW METHOD OF EVALUATION AS APPLIED TO PI Oxford (1865).

THE DYNAMICS OF A PARTICLE. Oxford (1865).

CASTLE-CROQUET. OXFORD(1866) —a revision of Croquet Castles for
four players.

THE ELECTIONS TO THE HEBDOMADAL COUNCIL. Oxford (1866).

THE DESERTED PARKS. Oxford (1867) —a parody of Goldsmith's Deserted village, attacking a proposal that the University Parks at Oxford should be used in part for College cricket grounds. The proposal
was rejected.

THE OFFER OF THE CLARENDON TRUSTEES. Oxford (1868) — an amusing jeu d'esprit on the subject of providing opportunities at the New Museum for mathematical calculations.

THE NEW BELFRY OF CHRIST CHURCH. Oxford (1872).

THE VISION OF THE THREE T'S. Oxford (1873) —these two items are
both skits on proposals for architectural alterations at Christ
Church.

THE BLANK CHEQUE. Oxford (1874) —a clever fable, with the
University as Mrs Nivers, based on a proposal to authorize the
building of the new Examination Schools before any plan or estimate
had been prepared.

NOTES BY AN OXFORD CHIEL. Oxford (1874) —reprints of six of
Dodgson's anonymous Oxford pieces.

WORD-LINKS—a word-game. Oxford (1878).

MlSCHMASCH—a word-game. Oxford (1882).

TWELVE MONTHS IN A CURATORSHIP: BY ONE WEIO HAS TRIED IT. Oxford
(1884).

SUPPLEMENT TO TWELVE MONTHS IN A CURATORSHIP . Oxford (1884).

THREE YEARS IN A CURATORSHIP: BY ONE WHOM IT HAS TRIED. Oxford
(1886).

A POSTAL PROBLEM. Place of publication unknown (1891).

CURIOSISSIMA CURATORIA. Oxford (1892).

Diaries and Letters

TOUR IN 1867 BY C. L. DODGSON. Privately printed. Philadelphia
(1928). —the diary of a trip to Russia in 1867 with Dr H. P.
Liddon. From the MS in the Parrish Collection.

A SELECTION FROM THE LETTERS OF LEWIS CARROLL TO HIS CHILD-FRIENDS
ed. E. M. Hatch (1933).

THE DIARIES OF LEWIS CARROLL, ed. R. L. Green. 2 vols. (1953).
Note. The originals of Dodgson's numerous letters to his
publishers, Macmillans, were sold in London in 1957 and are now in
the U.S.A.

Biographical and Critical Studies

THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF LEWIS CARROLL (REV. C. L. DODGSON), by S.
D. Collingwood (1898).

THE STORY OF LEWIS CARROLL, by I. Bowman (1899).

CONFESSIONS OF A CARICATURIST, by H. Furniss. 2 vols. (1901).

THE POETRY OF NONSENSE, by E. Carnmaerts (1925).

'Lewis Carroll', by W. de la Mare (1932) —this essay originally
appeared in The Eighteen-Eighties, ed. W. de la Mare, 1930.

'Alice's Recollections of Cartollian Days, by C. Hargreaves, The Cornhill Magazine, July 1932.